A study of color constancy methods for skin detection

2015 
Skin detection is an essential preliminary step in many applications. Most skin detectors are color based. The distributions of skin and non-skin colors overlap, and so color cannot fully discriminate between skin and non-skin pixels. Skin detection is made more difficult by the need to be able to robustly detect skin in a wide range of illumination settings. Several color correction methods have been proposed to account for non-standard illumination. We measured the overlap of skin and non-skin distributions of the ECU dataset with the Bhattacharyya distance. We also evaluated the performance of a selection of color correction methods. It was found that the majority of the selected color correction methods cause a decrease in performance while the best provides a negligible improvement in performance. It was found that the Bhattacharyya distance is a useful measure of the effect of pre-processing methods on the performance of skin detectors.
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